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Government urged to disrupt ‘addictive grip' of smartphones on children's lives

Government urged to disrupt ‘addictive grip' of smartphones on children's lives

Closures of playgrounds, busier roads, shortened school break times and the dominance of screentime have restricted children's opportunities to play, a report has suggested.
Urgent action is needed to create more opportunities for children to play outdoors and away from digital devices and social media, according to a report by the Raising the Nation Play Commission inquiry.
It warned: 'Too many of our children are spending their most precious years sedentary, doomscrolling on their phones and often alone, while their health and wellbeing deteriorates.'
The commission was chaired by Paul Lindley, founder of organic baby food manufacturer Ella's Kitchen, in partnership with the Centre for Young Lives think tank, which was co-founded by the former children's commissioner for England Baroness Anne Longfield.
It has called on the Government to establish a National Play Strategy for England, backed by an annual £125 million investment and led by a 'minister for play'.
The strategy should include a commitment to a 'step-change' in the quantity and quality of children's use of digital devices through stronger regulation, public engagement and information, and addressing addictive 'push' factors that have driven children online, the report added.
The inquiry has called on the Government to raise the digital age of consent to 16 and introduce a ban on smartphones in schools during the school day.
It added that it should become easier for parents to organise 'safe play' in their streets, and there should be a national ban on 'No Ball Games' signs.
A poll of 2,000 parents in England, commissioned by the inquiry, suggested that 55% of parents believe their youngest child plays outside less than they did when they were children.
Around three in four (76%) parents agree that people are generally less accepting of children playing outside on the street than when they were a child, according to the poll.
The Raising the Nation Play Commission brought together 19 expert commissioners to conduct a year-long inquiry into how play can be restored to every childhood in England.
Lady Longfield, executive chairwoman of the Centre for Young Lives, said: 'Too many of our children are spending their most precious years sedentary, doomscrolling on their phones and often alone, while their health and wellbeing deteriorates.
'It is no coincidence that the least happy generation, the generation with the highest rates of obesity and rising ill health, is the generation that plays less and less.
'As we have heard from a swathe of experts and professionals working with children over the last year, play is being squeezed out of childhoods, with drastic implications for children, our economy and public services.
'With so much at stake children really have everything to play for: their health, wellbeing, happiness, learning, and development depends on our ability to reignite the role of play.
'This report provides a blueprint for how we can get children playing again and also tackle the scourge of addictive doomscrolling, so we can prevent future generations from becoming glued to screens.'
Technology Secretary Pete Kyle has indicated he is considering an 'app cap' for children.
On Sunday, the minister signalled he was looking at measures to restrict the amount of time children spend on their phones, including through a possible 10pm curfew.
Mr Lindley, chairman of the Raising the Nation Play Commission, said: 'Creating truly playful communities is not just about better street design, traffic management, and reduced crime, but also about a reversal of the growing culture of intolerance towards children playing.
'This will also encourage more parents to have confidence they can let their children play out more freely, in the knowledge that their children will be both having a great time and are also safe.
'We need to give our children back the time, space, opportunity, freedom – and the right – to play again.'
A Government spokesperson said: 'We recognise the vital importance of play and access to nature as part of children's development and wellbeing as we strive to create the healthiest and happiest generation of children ever.
'Through our Plan for Change, we are setting young people up to achieve and thrive – both inside and outside the classroom.
'We have given hundreds of thousands of children the tools to turn their grey school spaces green as part of our National Education Nature Park, we are opening up grassroots sports to all with £100 million investment in facilities and we are working with experts to develop a framework to improve access to activities outside of school.
'Schools already have the power to completely ban phones in the classroom and the overwhelming majority – 99.8% of primary schools and 90% of secondary schools – limit or restrict use.
'And from July, new rules under the Online Safety Act will require social media platforms to protect children in the UK from seeing harmful content online.'
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Rural taxpayers set to contribute ‘unfair' levels of funding for urban-area services
Rural taxpayers set to contribute ‘unfair' levels of funding for urban-area services

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time30 minutes ago

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Rural taxpayers set to contribute ‘unfair' levels of funding for urban-area services

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Labour's migrant hotels policy dealt major blow after council WINS battle to stop asylum seekers being housed there
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Scottish Sun

time30 minutes ago

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Labour's migrant hotels policy dealt major blow after council WINS battle to stop asylum seekers being housed there

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'For households who don't need to move, this could act as a strong disincentive to sell, dampening transactions and potentially weighing on house price growth and Treasury revenues alike.' The Treasury is also looking at the idea of imposing an entirely new tax on the sale of more expensive homes, as first reported by The Guardian. However, government sources rejected suggestions that the threshold for a potential annual levy would be £500,000, suggesting it would have to be far higher to avoid slowing the market. No decisions have been taken given the budget is months out. Reeves is said to be concerned that Britain's property taxes are outdated and in need of reform and she also has limited room for manoeuvre given Labour's manifesto commitments. The chancellor will put the principle of 'fairness' at the heart of her budget. She is looking at property taxes after ruling out increasing income tax, national insurance or VAT in Labour's manifesto. 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If there was anything that reduced demand further, then the prospect of gains in the short-term would pretty much vanish.' Simon Brown, the chief executive of the property data company Landmark Information Group, said: 'Any tax that rises with property value risks slowing the housing market even further. If downsizing becomes less attractive, larger family homes stay off the market and transaction volumes fall. This reduces overall movement in the market upwards and downwards, and not only reduces choice for families and first-time buyers, but also hits the Treasury by shrinking the tax base.' Kirstie Allsopp, the property expert and TV presenter, warned that discussions about potential mansion taxes risked 'destabalising the property market'. By Stephen Swinford, Political Editor The concept of a 'mansion tax' is far from new. Over the past 12 years both the Liberal Democrats under Nick Clegg and then Labour under Ed Miliband have toyed with the idea, only for it to fail to survive. However, the dire fiscal circumstances facing Reeves now mean it is very much back on the table. The chancellor is said to be looking at two broad options: the first is a capital gains tax raid on the sale of high-value property; the second an annual levy. Both will be contentious, as recent political history suggests. Vince Cable first proposed the idea on behalf of the Liberal Democrats in 2009. He suggested the new tax would hit anyone owning a home worth more than £1 million. He then proposed a £2 million threshold after the Liberal Democrats entered a coalition with the Tories. The plans were dropped in favour of a 7 per cent stamp duty charge on houses worth more than £2 million after negotiations with George Osborne, then the chancellor. The Liberal Democrats tried to revive the idea but were met with outright opposition from their coalition partners. In 2013 Ed Miliband, then the Labour leader, revived the proposals. In the run-up to the 2015 election he claimed that the policy would raise £1.2 billion a year which could be used to fund the NHS. Osborne once again used his budget in 2014 to announce increases in stamp duty, which he suggested were an alternative to a mansion tax. Reeves, however, has little room for manoeuvre given Labour's pledge not to increase the main rates of income tax, VAT or national insurance. With a black hole in the public finances of as much as £41 billion the mansion tax could be about to make a return.

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